NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- If you're a parent who's been hit with financial body blows because of a job loss, depreciated assets or even just higher-than-expected tuition, you may be worried about how to pay the college bills coming due now.
Here are four tips for what you can do right now to make that payment:
1. Negotiate your bills
Josh McWhorter, a financial adviser and president of Black Oak Asset Management, suggests negotiating with your lender. After all, more banks have been forced to do just that as consumers have struggled to make mortgage payments. So why not your college loan?
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"There are so many who can't or won't pay bills that it's better to get something than nothing," McWhorter says. "Maybe they'll work out a payment plan or defer the payment, or even reduce the interest costs."
McWhorter said universities, who themselves are struggling in this economic climate, may be more willing these days to accept lower payment if it means avoiding a non-payment. As with most things in life, you won't know until you ask.
2. Reach out to Uncle Joe
A relative who's financially better off might be able to help you foot the college bill. But did you realize it can help them, too?
By gifting money to you, whether in the form of a check to you or the college directly, your relative can reduce their taxable estate and enjoy passing on their assets today, while they're still alive.
"If a great uncle has some money, maybe you can talk to them and say, 'Would you mind helping?'" McWhorter says.
The tax laws allow anyone to gift up to $13,000 per year to any one person without a tax penalty and up to $1 million over their lifetime. As an example, if you have 10 people you want to gift money to and you give them $20,000 each, $7,000 per person is over the annual gift tax exclusion. However, you can apply that $70,000 (10 x $7,000) over the annual gift exclusion toward your lifetime exclusion of $1 million. That means you won't pay taxes on that gift and you can still give more than $13,000 in any one year if desired.
And, even better, if your benefactor pays the school directly, that tuition payment may be entirely excluded from the gift tax. Check with a tax professional to make sure the payment on your student's behalf qualifies for that exclusion.
3. Borrow
Borrowing for college has taken on new meaning with the Internet since consumers can now borrow directly from others -- relatives or not -- and possibly get a more attractive rate. But if you're borrowing from a relative or someone through less formal channels, be sure to get a contract or promissory note.
"You might have the best relationship but I can't tell you how many times I've seen money tear families apart," McWhorter says. "The contract also protects you in the event the IRS looks at it and questions whether it was a taxable gift."
4. Tap your employer
Some employers offer tuition reimbursement, while others will make loans to employees, something more common in smaller companies. Either way, your HR department is the contact. Be sure to ask if any help may be considered taxable income.
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Craig Stephen
This Week in China